Handbook of the Sociology of Religion

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Jewish Identity in the United States and Israel 241


and the Americas.^3 We begin with a review of the evolution of Jewish identity within
Jewish civilization, go on to examine the conceptualization and measurement of that
identity in sociology and the social sciences, review the sources (with special reference
to gender) and consequences as well as the role of denominations in shaping identity,
and finally offer some concluding thoughts and implications for further research.


EVOLUTION OF JEWISH CIVILIZATION AND IDENTITY


Jewish identity has generally been regarded throughout the evolutionary history of the
civilization of the Jewish people^4 as the result of two forces: “The consensus of thinking
or feeling within the existing Jewish community in each age and the force of outside,
often anti-Jewish pressure” (Hertzberg 1971: 53). The formal definition of Jewish iden-
tity that is most long lasting and harking back about two millennia is provided by
religious law orhalakhah(literally the “way” or the “walk” of Jewish life), namely, one
is Jewish who is born of a Jewish mother or is converted to Judaism (see Zohar and
Sagi 1994). As Hertzberg (1971) pointed out, this is not the oldest definition, nor the
only definition, that has existed since ancient and medieval times; and later, we will
compare this definition to that of social scientists.
The conceptualization of Jewish identity (and its oscillation through time and space)
requires an understanding of the transformation of Jewish civilization across the mul-
tiple millennia of the existence of the Jewish people, but the need for brevity limits this
discussion. (For a concise review of Jewish history, see Ben-Sasson 1971.) Suffice it to say
that powerful economic and political forces in the social sphere have transformed the
cultural (i.e., religious and literary traditions) as well as the personal sphere (i.e., familial
and individual identities) of the Jews throughout the development of Jewish civiliza-
tion from the biblical to the contemporary period.^5 Jewish identity, which in biblical
times, was transmitted through patrilineal descent, was changed during the rabbinic
period to matrilineal descent. Deviations from this normative Jewish identity, such as
the Marranos or secret Jews of Spain after the exile in 1492, were treated differently by
various rabbinic authorities during the medieval period. Subsequently, modernity was
ushered in by the French Revolution at the end of the eighteenth century, which paved
the way for the collapse of the physical and social ghetto in which many Jews had
lived in medieval European societies. This emancipation created opportunities to give
religious identity a variety of expressions through the development of denominations,
especially in the Diaspora. New social contacts developed and intermarriage increased
in Western countries, resulting in the notion of Jewish identity being divided between
a stricthalakhicreligious definition as well as a non-halakhic, ethnic definition, which
emerged in Israel and the Diaspora.


(^3) By contrast, there were an estimated eighteen million Jews in the world in 1939 on the eve
of World War II and the ensuing Holocaust, and they represented eight tenths of one percent
of the world’s population. The more than thirteen million Jews today represent a mere two
tenths of one percent of the world’s population, a proportional decline of three fourths.
(^4) See Eisenstadt (1992) for an elaboration of this theme.
(^5) The approximate time frames for the five periods of the development of Jewish civilization are
as follows: 1. Biblical (origins in the fourth millennium removed from the present to the fourth
century Before the Common Era or B.C.E.), 2. Second Temple/Talmudic (fourth century B.C.E.
to the fifth century); 3. Medieval (fifth–eighteenth centuries), 4. Modern (later eighteenth to
mid-twentieth centuries); and 5. Contemporary (mid-twentieth century to the present).

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